Is Solar Worth It in New Hampshire? (2026 Analysis)
Updated 2026-07-07 · MySunROI Research
Solar in New Hampshire is financially attractive for many homeowners in 2026. Average payback: 7.4 years. Net cost after ITC: $12,700. Annual savings: ~$1,720.
Free quote comparison
Compare solar quotes in New Hampshire
Free — compare pre-screened local installers. No obligation.
MySunROI may earn a fee if you request quotes through partner links. See our disclaimer.
New Hampshire solar ROI snapshot
- 6 kW net cost after ITC: $12,700
- Estimated payback: 7.4 years
- Electricity rate: 22.5¢/kWh
- Peak sun hours: 4.1/day
- 30-year savings: $48,160
When solar is worth it in New Hampshire
Solar installation costs in New Hampshire reflect local labor rates, permit fees, and utility interconnection rules. A typical 6 kW system runs $14,140–$24,990 before the 30% federal tax credit, with net cost around $9,900–$17,490.
- Monthly bill $120+ with south-facing roof
- You purchase (not lease) to claim ITC
- Staying past payback (~7.4 years)
- See full New Hampshire cost breakdown
When to wait or skip
- Moving within 3–5 years
- Heavy shading or roof replacement needed soon
- Very low usage under $75/month
New Hampshire quick stats
- 6 kW after ITC
- $12,700
- Payback
- 7.4 years
- Electric rate
- 22.5¢/kWh
- Annual savings
- $1,720
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the payback in New Hampshire?
Average 7.4 years for a 6 kW system after the 30% federal credit, based on New Hampshire rates and production.
Lease or buy?
Buying usually saves $10k–$30k more over 25 years. See lease vs buy guide.
Related pages
How We Calculate Solar Costs
MySunROI estimates combine NREL residential PV installed-price benchmarks, EIA state electricity rates, and regional labor modifiers — updated 2026-07-07.
Estimates only — not tax or financial advice. Estimates based on NREL PV cost benchmarks, EIA electricity rates, and 2026 installer pricing surveys.